Monday, May 7, 2012

Baise-Moi







Baise-Moi


Language: French with English Subtitles

Brief Synopsis: Two young women who have both lost their connection with society team up and go on a spree of sex and violence. Manu (Raffaƫla Anderson) has an abusive older brother and after being gang-raped, kills him when he calls her a slut for "enjoying the rape." Nadine (Karen Lancaume) sees her only friend get shot because of drug dealing, and she also has less-than-kind clients in her work as a sometime prostitute. The two meet while on the run at a train station and begin killing, at first for money and then for revenge; going after the rich and men.

My Take: Baise-Moi, which translates literally into "Fuck Me", is somewhat akin to Thelma & Louise on steroids, paired with the violence of Natural Born Killers. The sex in the film is not simulated, and the two lead actresses are former porn stars. The murders are frequent and often without real motive. Yes, Manu was raped, but she doesn't go after the men that raped her. Instead she kills at random, from men she picks up for casual sex to a woman on the street at the ATM to a whole club full of people. Nadine, for her part, is reluctant at first, and it seems like Manu is the aggressor in most of the situations.

This is no revenge story. These women are killing simply for the sake of killing, for the rush it gives them. They are equal to their male counterparts in cinema in this, and I found myself comparing their glee more than once to Otis in Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.

Perhaps what's most interesting in the film is the juxtaposition of sex and violence. Different people will be more offended by differing things, and I think there are a lot of questions one can ask in regards to this. The sex is extremely explicit, but so is the violence. The film has been banned or heavily cut in a number of countries, including it's home, France. The cuts made are usually in regards to the sex, not the violence. This raises the question: even though sex is a natural part of life, and murder is not, why does society allow for explicit scenes of violence to be allowed in theaters and not scenes of explicit sex?

Is Baise-Moi worth sitting through? Maybe. It really made me think about a number of things, including the fact that I have never seen two females in such roles before. The acting is actually quite good, though the cinematography is distracting and the soundtrack makes almost no sense in regards to what's happening on screen. I'm glad I watched it once, but I have no plans to ever watch the film again.

Entertainment value: Medium. Intriguing and often engaging but the murders and sex scenes become repetitive; the lack of plot can also cause the film to drag. However, at a mere hour and seventeen minutes, it's an easy length to enjoy.
Scare value: Low. Violent and tense in places but never "scary."
Realistic?: Medium-High. There are definitely repercussions to the killing spree.
Violence/Gore: High. Quite the body count, lots of close-ups of gunshot wounds. One particularly nasty death by stiletto-heels.
Sex: Extremely High. NONE of the sex is simulated, penetration is shown, and there are graphic scenes of oral sex.
This movie is for: Those interested in gender studies/gender relations, serial killer movie fans, fans of the new New French Extremity film movement.
Films like it: Thelma & Louise (sort of), Natural Born Killers, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, Man Bites Dog

IMDB Entry on Baise-Moi
(Note: IMDB translates it as "Rape Me", but the filmmakers have denounced this title as incorrect.)
Trailer

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